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Canada: Supreme Court refuses to hear appeal on MP3 player surcharge PDF Print E-mail
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Thursday, 28 July 2005
Canada: Supreme Court refuses to hear appeal on MP3 player surcharge
National Post - Canada

TORONTO (CP) - The fight over a levy on IPods and other digital music devices ended Thursday when the Supreme Court of Canada refused to hear any further arguments on the matter.

That means there will be no levy applied to digital audio recorders such as Apple's popular IPod and IPod Shuffle as well as other MP3 players like IRiver.

"Obviously we're disappointed. We felt it was self-evident that those products are sold for the purpose of copying music," said David Basskin, of the Canadian Private Copying Collective (CPCC), the non-profit agency which collects tariffs on behalf of musicians and record companies.

The group had wanted the high court to overturn last year's Federal Court of Appeal decision which quashed the levy on the popular gadgets.

The non-profit agency had been collecting the tariff - $2 for non-removable memory capacity of up to one GB, $15 for one to 10 GBs, $25 for more than 10 GB - since December 2003 through a tax built into the price of the devices.

It stopped in December 2004 when the Federal Court overturned the policy at the urging of retailers and manufacturers such as Future Shop, Apple Canada and Dell Computer Corporation of Canada.

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Survey: Music pirates are big clients for legal downloads PDF Print E-mail
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Thursday, 28 July 2005
Survey: Music pirates are big clients for legal downloads
BBC

People who illegally share music files online are also big spenders on legal music downloads, research suggests.

Digital music research firm The Leading Question found that they spent four and a half times more on paid-for music downloads than average fans.

Rather than taking legal action against downloaders, the music industry needs to entice them to use legal alternatives, the report said.

According to the music industry, legal downloads have tripled during 2005.

In the first half of 2005, some 10 million songs have been legally downloaded.

Music 'myth'

More needs to be done to capitalise on the power of the peer-to-peer networks that many music downloaders still use, said the report's authors.

The study found that regular downloaders of unlicensed music spent an average of £5.52 a month on legal digital music.

This compares to just £1.27 spent by other music fans.Write Comment (0 Comments)
AOL to Offer Legal MP3 Downloads PDF Print E-mail
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Thursday, 28 July 2005
AOL to Offer Legal MP3 Downloads
BetaNews

AOL said on Thursday it would offer free music downloads through AOLMusic.com that would carry tunes from popular mainstream artists - without digital rights management. The songs would come in the traditional MP3 format without restrictions, meaning the user would be able to do with the track as they pleased.

The selections will change each month, and AOL told BetaNews that 16 artists would be featured at launch. The number of tracks would vary, AOL said, based on agreements between the company and record labels.

While other MP3-based music stores have surfaced in recent months, none have provided mainstream artists due to resistance from the record industry. AOL's offering would be the first legal MP3-based download catalog.Write Comment (0 Comments)
XM, Napster in online music joint venture PDF Print E-mail
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Thursday, 28 July 2005
XM, Napster in online music joint venture
Reuters.uk, UK

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Online music vendor Napster Inc. <NAPS.O> and satellite radio provider XM Satellite Radio <XMSR.O> are making music together.

The two companies said late on Tuesday they would launch an online service that enables XM's 4.4 million subscribers to buy music they hear on the paid XM radio service.

The two plan to jointly launch "XM + Napster," in the fourth quarter of 2005 in conjunction with the availability of new XM/MP3 players that let users bookmark songs they hear while listening to the radio for future purchases online.

After the MP3 player is connected to a personal computer, the service will match the marked XM titles with songs in Napster's catalog so that they can be purchased.

Subscribers can also use the XM + Napster service to organize playlists using other songs from personal libraries and transfer these unique playlists to the XM players.

Currently XM's MyFi portable radio sells for about $299.

Those XM subscribers without the new MP3 devices, can also tag songs for purchase online through XM Radio Online, a Web-based service.Write Comment (0 Comments)
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